Demisch Danant is pleased to present Autoprogettazione
(2007), a show of do-it-yourself' wooden works by Italian designer
Enzo Mari (b. 1932), on view September 27 through November 3. While
enrolled at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan from 1952 - 1956,
at a time when mass production was quickly replacing craftsmanship,
Mari developed a creative conscience and philosophical outlook in
reaction to what he saw as a cultural shift in favor of accessibility
at the expense of quality. Mari's design approach has since remained
theoretical, primarily concerned with the relationship between the
object and the user.

n 1974, at the Galleria Milano, Mari exhibited a collection of wooden furniture entitled Autoprogettazione,
which translates as self design.' Mari distributed a free catalogue
at the exhibition with detailed instructions for constructing these
simple furniture pieces using standardized wooden planks and nails. The
catalogue marked a dramatic attempt on Mari's part to reconnect the
consumer with the direct experience, construction and understanding of
their lived environment.

On view at Demisch Danant are six pieces from the Autoprogettazione
collection, all constructed and signed this year by Enzo Mari himself.
By involving the consumer in the actual construction of the piece,
these wooden works are perhaps Mari's most notable reaction to the
alienating affects of mass production, and remain poignant markers of
resistance in today's increasingly industrialized world. Furthermore,
these self-designs' have achieved contemporary relevance in a global
culture increasingly concerned with sustainability and the ill effects
of mass consumption.